V&A’s Ethiopian treasures: A crown, a wedding dress and other loot

V&A’s Ethiopian treasures: A crown, a wedding dress and other loot

The UK’s Victoria and Albert Museum has offered to return on loan treasures to Ethiopia seized by British troops 150 years ago, including an ornate crown, a royal wedding dress and a gold chalice.

The overture came as some of the objects go on display until June 2019 at the museum in London to mark the anniversary of the Maqdala battle in 1868.

Historians say 15 elephants and 200 mules were needed to cart away all the loot from Maqdala, Emperor Tewodros II’s northern citadel capital.

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Made in the 1860s, this wedding dress is thought to have belonged to Queen Woyzaro Terunesh

Ethiopia lodged a formal request in 2008 at various British institutions for the return of the treasures worth millions of dollars taken from Maqdala.

V&A director Tristram Hunt has reiterated that the items would remain the property of the museum but said they could be sent back home on “long-term loan”.

7B1813BA-A693-477C-AD07-EF2DB9CDCDB9In the mid-19th Century Emperor Tewodros decided to modernise his empire, Abyssinia, by opening up relations with the UK

But things deteriorated after requests for military assistance were ignored

In protest the emperor detained the British consul and other foreigners

Britain reacted by sending an army to the emperor’s fortress in Maqdala

Rather than become a prisoner, Emperor Tewodros took his own life

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British forces left with manuscripts, crowns, crosses, chalices, religious icons, royal and ecclesiastic vestments, shields and arms
The emperor’s seven-year-old son was also taken to Britain and then educated at Rugby School:

He died of pleurisy at 18 and is buried at Windsor Castle – the Ethiopian government has requested his remains be returned

The UK treasury deposited a gold crown and chalice at the V&A in 1872

The rest of the V&A’s collection relating to Maqdala came later via private donations and purchases.

Presentational grey line
Mr Hunt told The Art Newspaper that the offer had been made to the ambassador at Ethiopia’s embassy in London, which advised the V&A in its preparations for the exhibition, which opens on Thursday.

Ambassador Hailemichael Aberra Afework is quoted by the UK’s Guardian newspaper as saying: “We are delighted with the new partnership between Ethiopia and the V&A and look forward to working together in the future to our mutual benefit.”

The V&A says the 20 exhibits going on display will allow a new audience to appreciate the beauty of their craftsmanship, with examples of intricate and skilled metalwork and textiles, and to reflect on their controversial history.

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The display will also have some of the earliest examples of military photography in the UK, which the museum says was the precursor to modern photojournalism.

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